The US tots up the cost of military intervention in Syria's civil war, the world goes crazy for Britain's new prince, the Pope hits Brazil, and McDonald's says: if you're on horseback, you're not coming in.

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NEED TO KNOW

The cost of war. The United States' highest military officer has put a price on intervention in Syria's civil war. According to Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and President Barack Obama's principal advisor on such matters, deploying American forces to control chemical weapons, maintain a no-fly zone or take out the Syrian government's military equipment would in each case run to $1 billion a month, if not more.

The cheapest option by far, Dempsey writes in his assessment, is training Syria's armed opposition — a snip at $500 million per year. But experience has taught that the true cost of America's involvement in wars beyond its borders can't always be added up on a balance sheet, he admits. If the US is seriously considering military intervention in Syria, Dempsey says, "we must anticipate and be prepared for the unintended consequences of our action."

WANT TO KNOW

The royal he. Not since the days of Henry VIII has the birth of a new prince been greeted with such excitement (and that turned pretty well, didn't it?). After months of collective baby brain, Kate Middleton gave birth to a son who one day — provided Brits haven't finally fallen out of love with the monarchy by the time he outlives his great-grandmother, grandfather and father — will be king.

The Pope does Rio. In Brazil, Catholics are going wild as only Catholics can for Pope Francis, who has begun his first overseas trip as pontiff in the Latin American nation. Tens of thousands of believers gathered to welcome him to Rio de Janiero yesterday, thronging toward the small, open car he favors instead of the Popemobile.

Later the pilgrims were replaced with protesters as Brazilians, still in the midst of a nationwide rally movement, decried the cost of his visit. But for a pope who declares that "a Christian who is not a revolutionary today isn't a Christian," that's presumably no bad thing. As he tours a region that's both the world's most Catholic and one of its most unequal, will Francis prove himself a radical at heart?

Will Motown get its groove back? Stranger things have happened. Detroit may be the biggest US city to go bankrupt, its population may have shrunk to a fraction of its former size and its unemployment and murder rates may be soaring, but other cities have gone through worse — and come out the other side.

Irate when staff denied her service, she actually succeeded in galloping into the restaurant itself, where her steed, um, relieved himself on the floor. She's since been fined by police for causing "obvious distress and upset to customers trying to eat."